George Clooney's Open House
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
Log in

I forgot my password

Latest topics
» George Clooney e Amal Alamuddin in Francia, ecco il loro nido
The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture EmptyWed 17 Apr 2024, 03:41 by annemariew

» George and Amal speaking at the Skoll Foundation conference in Oxford today
The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture EmptyWed 17 Apr 2024, 03:37 by annemariew

» George in IF
The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture EmptyFri 12 Apr 2024, 18:44 by party animal - not!

» Amal announces new law degree sponsorship
The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture EmptyFri 05 Apr 2024, 01:51 by annemariew

» George's new project The Department - a series
The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture EmptyFri 22 Mar 2024, 09:42 by annemariew

»  Back in the UK
The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture EmptyMon 11 Mar 2024, 16:38 by annemariew

» George Clooney makes the effort to show his fans that he appreciates them
The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture EmptySun 10 Mar 2024, 21:20 by carolhathaway

» What Happened?
The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture EmptyTue 27 Feb 2024, 10:51 by annemariew

» George and Amal in France with new St Bernard puppy
The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture EmptyMon 26 Feb 2024, 22:31 by Ida

Our latest tweets
Free Webmaster ToolsSubmit Express

The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture

3 posters

Go down

The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture Empty The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture

Post by Mazy Sat 01 Mar 2014, 08:44

The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture

George Clooney shines in his best-directed film since 'Good Night, and Good Luck'
By Rex Reed 2/05/2014 11:20am

[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.]
Dimitri Leonidas, George Clooney, John Goodman, Bob Balaban and Matt Damon, from left, star in The Monuments Men.
In the last three years of World War II, while Hitler was ravaging Europe, a small group of soldiers, historians and academics joined forces, under the approval and guidance of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, to locate, rescue and return to their rightful owners the European art treasures of the world, artifacts stolen from museums, churches and private collectors by the Third Reich. These unheralded heroes were called the Monuments Men. This is their story. It is true. It is history. As a film, it is riveting, suspenseful, harrowing and exciting, and somehow, it also manages to be something rare among war pictures—a big-scale entertainment.

________________________________________
The Monuments Men ★★★½
(3.5/4 stars)
Written by: George Clooney and Grant Heslov
Directed by: George Clooney
Starring: George Clooney, Cate Blanchett and Matt Damon
Running time: 118 min.
________________________________________
The Monuments Men covers so much territory that it is difficult to know just where to begin. In his best directed film since Good Night, and Good Luck, George Clooney, who also co-wrote the screenplay with Grant Heslov, proves he’s more than just another pretty face, collating archival information from the great book by Robert M. Edsel into a solid adventure story that seldom lags. Mr. Clooney, with fewer hully-chee smirks than usual, also plays the paterfamilias of the platoon—an art historian named Frank Stokes, based on renowned Harvard art conservationist George Stout. He gathers six colleagues too old for the trenches and too out of shape for boot camp—one curator of medieval art at the Metropolitan Museum (Matt Damon), one architect (Bill Murray), one sculptor (John Goodman), one French art dealer (Jean Dujardin), one historian (Bob Balaban), one British art expert (Downton Abbey’s Hugh Bonneville) and a young German Jew who acts as a driver and translator (Dimitri Leonidas).

We follow their meticulous sleuthing, from their landing on an allied-protected beach at Normandy to the farmhouses and country hamlets of France and Belgium and all the way to the Battle of the Bulge and ending under the German salt mines where they uncover 16,000 concealed treasures stored for Hitler’s proposed Fuhrer Museum nestled among 100 tons of gold from the fillings in the teeth of captured Jews. The Monuments Men were racing against time to protect Picassos and Rembrandts and Da Vinci’s Last Supper from both the retreating Nazis and the advancing Russians, while trying to convince the skeptics (including two U.S. presidents) that the work was imperative to remind the world that civilization is defined by the quality of its art—a still evolving subject that has only been addressed once on the screen, in John Frankenheimer’s The Train (1964) with Burt Lancaster, Paul Scofield and Jeanne Moreau.

There is tragedy along the way, but humor, too. Everyone has a strong scene—Mr. Damon as James Granger, who accidentally stands on a mine while the others try to figure out how to detonate it, and director Clooney, when his character tells a captured Nazi commandant how he’ll relish reading his obituary while visiting a Jewish delicatessen when he gets back to New York. There’s a running gag about James’s terrible French, which he learned, to the horror of the French allies, in Montreal. There’s a moving scene in a makeshift hospital camp in Germany where a phonograph record from home plays “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” over a loudspeaker for the dying and wounded soldiers. O.K., Mr. Clooney can be shamelessly manipulative, but I’ll be damned if the scene doesn’t work as forcefully as the sight of the German swastika flying over the roofs of Paris.

Critics in the trades and at the Berlin Film Festival have dispatched mixed reviews, objecting to poetic license, like the near-romance between James and Claire Simone (Cate Blanchett), a mousy, bespectacled Resistance fighter based on real-life curator Rose Valland, who worked as a secretary for Hermann Goring when he used the Jeu de Paume Museum in 1943 to store Nazi plunder, risking her life to secretly document the shipment of every work of art transported to Germany by her boss. In what I assume to be a fictional add-on for the sake of melodrama and a touch of sentiment, she befriends James after she is falsely imprisoned as a German collaborator and entrusts him with her ledgers and journals. This act of altruism and Claire’s subsequent attempt to seduce the highly ethical all-American husband played by Mr. Damon may be Mr.

Clooney’s ruse to raise the blood pressure and arouse the audience’s possible waning interest in a film that is otherwise totally sexless. But in reality, Ms. Valland’s meticulous records did lead to the recovery of thousands of masterpieces the Monuments Men would otherwise never have located.

Jim Bissell’s magnificent sets, stunning location camerawork throughout Europe by Phedon Papamichael and a fabulous score by composer Alexandre Desplat that brought tears to my eyes are all big reasons why a movie this massive deserves bravos. With looted art still turning up in Germany every year, the search continues, so the movie could not be more relevant. At a time crowded with moronic action flicks, pointless remakes and animated juvenilia, it’s a genuine pleasure to experience a mature film about something that changed the world. Staging so many vignettes over such a protracted period of time frames with such a large cast in such a variety of countries, a disconnected sense of “wait a minute, what’s going on here?” is inevitable. But The Monuments Men is still one hell of a monumental motion picture.

Thirty years from now, will anyone remember the accomplishments of those saviors of five-million works of art that enriched the aesthetic history of the world? Thanks to George Clooney, they will now.

Read more at [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]
Mazy
Mazy
Achieving total Clooney-dom

Posts : 2883
Join date : 2012-11-03

Back to top Go down

The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture Empty Re: The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture

Post by Joanna Sat 01 Mar 2014, 10:41

Thirty years from now, will anyone remember the accomplishments of those saviors of five-million works of art that enriched the aesthetic history of the world? Thanks to George Clooney, they will now.

This may well be true.
The reason I follow George is his ability. and it seems his commitment, to make films which teach one something.
Good Night & Good Luck is a good example of that IMO.
Joanna
Joanna
George Clooney fan forever!

Posts : 19431
Join date : 2011-11-17
Location : UK

Back to top Go down

The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture Empty Re: The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture

Post by it's me Sat 01 Mar 2014, 15:30

I agree !!  cheers cheers cheers 
it's me
it's me
George Clooney fan forever!

Posts : 18398
Join date : 2011-01-03

Back to top Go down

The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture Empty Re: The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture

Post by Mazy Sun 02 Mar 2014, 00:23

That's also what I love about him most the type of person he is. He does thing that he believes to be right. Even in his career the money is secondary to what the project relates. xxx
Mazy
Mazy
Achieving total Clooney-dom

Posts : 2883
Join date : 2012-11-03

Back to top Go down

The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture Empty Re: The Monuments Men Is One Hell Of A Monumental Motion Picture

Post by Sponsored content


Sponsored content


Back to top Go down

Back to top

- Similar topics

 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum